Another Clarence the Angel Mission
FADE IN.
EXT. HEAVEN. BOTH DAY AND NIGHT AND
NEITHER.
Clarence the “Wonderful Life” angel
and his mentor, Mr. “Heaven Can Wait, Here Comes” Jordan, stroll
thoughtfully through the heavenly mist, conferring over the latter’s
hand-held OmniVista smart-device. (Did we say “smart”? Ha! This
is Heaven. It’s omniscient!) They appear to be browsing shopping
sites. Clarence, wearing his favorite gown, tenderly strokes the
bedazzled ruching across his bodice, his wings inadvertently
swiping-right on Jordan’s screen.
MR. JORDAN
Ah, Clarence, I know how fond you are
of our prize-winning AngelWear bridal selections, but for this
mission we need to catch you up to something more appropriate for a
modern business milieu. It is now the year of mercy, Two Thousand and
Eighteen, and while gentlemen of distinction do dress distinctly, we
shall need you to be more, shall we say, indistinct.
CLARENCE
Business? What kind of business this
time? Didn’t our dear Mr. Dickens remind us “mankind” is our
business?
JORDAN nodding indulgently
Yes,
quite right, darling Clarence. Words wisely spoken in the character
of dead-as-a-door-nail Jacob Marley, to be precise.
The
two shoppers glance across the cloudscape to a tall clerk’s desk,
where a ghostly Marley, tugging at the chains at his feet, scratches
busily at his ledger.
JORDAN
calling out
How’s
that list coming along, Marley?
MARLEY
I’m
just finishing up the second draft now, Mr. Jordan!
JORDAN
Now,
Biff, don’t try and con me!
MARLEY
I
mean, I’m ... I’m just getting started on the Naughty list now,
sir.
Marley
double-taps his smart-device and swipes down through this said list.
And swipes and swipes and swipes. He sighs self-pityingly.
MARLEY
It’ll
only be a minute. (Sotto voce) Or
a millennium.
CLARENCE
I
didn’t know we called it that, too. I always thought the Naughty
and Nice lists were a Santa Claus thing.
JORDAN
Well,
this time of year, we put in a little extra work for our friends down
at the North Pole. The lists do come in handy later, when the Time
comes for each little girl and each boy.
Jordan
and Clarence resume their shopping. Then, with a sweep of his grand
wing, Jordan swipes the view on his hand-held onto a nearby
billboard-sized cloud display. We see a bright, colorful room full of
toys. A grandmotherly woman, holding her own smart-device, makes her
way to each toy and inspects it carefully.
JORDAN
Now
observe this young woman closely, dear Clarence.
CLARENCE
“Young”?
She looks like somebody’s little ol’ grandma.
JORDAN
In
age, perhaps, but no. She never married and is no one’s grandma.
Meet Susan, age 60, founder, owner, CEO, and chair of the
second-most-successful toy company in the world.
CLARENCE
Only
second? What is she, like the Clay Aiken of the toy world? And we
need to help her get to Number One? (He observes Susan
working in her toy shop.) She
looks pretty happy where she is. Lovely, too. Why did she never
marry? Did she never fall in love?
JORDAN
Well,
yes. She did fall in love, in fact. It’s complicated. And a tad
inappropriate.
CLARENCE
Oh my
oh my oh my. Not another one of your dirty stories, Mr. Jordan.
Quickly—and
not just for the sake of brevity but to minimize inevitable copyright
infringement—Jordan tells Clarence the tale of When Josh Met Susan.
It’s a 30-year-old tale of two (seemingly) 30-year-olds meeting at
the Macmillan Toy Co. in New York. It was true love, but a love not
meant to be, for the boy toy really wasn’t 30 at all, but a
13-year-old whose wish to be Big was temporarily granted by the
mysterious and mischievous angel Zoltar.
(ON
SCREEN) EXT. AN AMUSEMENT PARK. DAY.
In the
scene Clarence and Jordan watch together, Josh has asked Zoltar to
return him from the 30-year-old man’s life he was not prepared to
live and back to the 13-year-old life he knew was where he should be.
He has invited the 30-year-old “Big” Susan to come with him, back
to her own adolescence. Balking at the memory of the hormones and
zits and irrational rages and obsessions of her 13-year-old self,
Susan declines. Josh assures her he will never forget her.
SUSAN
(age 30)
Who
knows, maybe in 10 years. … Maybe you should hold onto my number!
She
kisses young Josh tenderly on the forehead and says goodbye to the
love of her life.
(SCREEN
FADES OUT.)
EXT.
HEAVEN
Clarence
dabs his moist eyes with the tip of his wing, and Jordan toggles his
device back to shopping for men’s wear.
CLARENCE
Don’t
tell me. Ten years pass, and Josh and Susan don’t meet again.
JORDAN
And
another 10 years. And now another. (He double-taps his
device.) Ah, this is just the
suit for you, darling Clarence. Now you can visit Big Susan and not
scare the bejeebers out of her.
CLARENCE
Oh,
that’s fine. But you haven’t told me my mission. And what
happened to the boy Josh?
JORDAN
Ah,
yes. Josh. Poor kid.
CLARENCE
Oh,
no! What did happen?
Jordan
swipes his giant wing across the billboard-sized screen, and we see
young Josh standing once again before the mysterious and mischievous
angel Zoltar. Clarence clutches hand to brow.
CLARENCE
D’oh!
(ON
SCREEN) EXT. AMUSEMENT PARK. NIGHT.
The
13-year-old Josh, standing before the Zoltar fortune-telling machine,
makes his wish.
JOSH
Boy, I
loved working at that toy company. Oh, Zoltar, this is my wish: When
I get big again, I want to be in toys. Final answer.
Josh
aims the ramp at Zoltar’s mouth and releases a ball. Zoltar
swallows the ball, and his eyes light up. His internal machinery
clanks and rattles, and into the slot produces the card with Josh’s
new fate. Josh picks up the card and slowly turns it over. The
message reads: “Your wish is granted.”
JOSH
Awesome!
MARLEY
(voice over)
What a
maroon.
A
thunderous cloud burst interrupts all heavenly consultation. A bright
burst of lightning changes the scene, and a nattily attired Clarence
finds himself in:
INT.
SUSAN’S TOY COMPANY SHOWROOM. DAY
The
room is bright and colorful, shelves lining all the walls and filled
with toys and games for all ages. In the corner of the room is a tall
clerk’s desk, topped with stacks of ledgers, behind which Susan
examines her own books, not having a Bob Cratchitt of her own. Over
her shoulder, on a shelf in a special bullet-proof glass case, is her
most prized possession, a toy cowboy named Woody.
Not
terribly startled by the sudden appearance of “businessman”
Clarence, Susan dreamily looks up from her work.
SUSAN
Good
afternoon, Mr. Angelo. Or may I call you Clarence?
CLARENCE
You
were expecting me, Miss Susan? I’m a little surprised.
SUSAN
Don’t
be silly. I know everyone in this business. And I know what you’re
here after.
CLARENCE
You
know of the hereafter?
SUSAN
Yes,
of course. You toy men are all the same. As long as I own the Woody
license, I will never be without interested visitors.
She
turns to her glass-enclosed prize and blows him a kiss.
CLARENCE
Ah,
but my dear Miss Susan. What if I were to tell you it is not what I
want that brings me to see you, but rather what you
want.
SUSAN
I can
assure you, Mr. Angelo, I want for nothing.
Susan
resumes checking her ledger. Clarence wanders around the room
admiring the wealth of treasures surrounding the grandmotherly yet
youthful woman.
CLARENCE
Nothing,
it seems, except someone to play with.
The
gentleness of Clarence’s voice touches Susan. She puts her pen down
and picks up her smart-device, tapping it distractedly.
SUSAN
And is
there enough magic in the air, darling Clarence, to fetch me a
playmate at my advanced age?
CLARENCE
Again,
you seem to know me.
SUSAN
I know
of you, certainly.
Where would this business be without angel investors? (Suspiciously.)
And before you ask, the answer is No. You can’t have him.
Susan
moves protectively in front of her precious Woody display case.
CLARENCE
I
don’t know what you mean, my dear. I see you wish not to part with
your favorite doll. Handsome little cowboy, isn’t he!
SUSAN
Yes,
yes. He’s not just a toy. He reminds me of what it means to be a
child. And yet, somehow, he also holds all the virtues of a great
man, the man I would love to have found for myself. I thought I had …
once.
CLARENCE
Once
upon a time … 30 years ago perhaps?
Susan
moves cautiously toward the businessman with no discernible business
agenda, but a deeply personal one.
SUSAN
What
do you know of the events of 30 years ago?
CLARENCE
Well,
there was that matter of the missing-person reports. It must have
been a little difficult to explain to the authorities why one Josh
Baskin, age 13, was found just as another Josh Baskin, age 30, went
missing.
SUSAN
You
know about Josh?
CLARENCE
(glancing Heavenward)
We
know everything.
SUSAN
Then
why did Josh—the young one, I mean—why couldn’t I ever find him
again?
Clarence
moves toward the secured display case behind Susan’s desk.
CLARENCE
Let’s
just say he was full of magic and make-believe, but not very good at
communicating his wishes to those with the power to make them come
true.
Susan
suddenly realizes why her toy cowboy had been so precious to her all
along.
SUSAN
You
mean … this is …
MARLEY
(off stage)
It
ain’t Pinocchio, sister.
Susan
opens a secret compartment in her tall desk and retrieves a key to
unlock the secure glass case protecting her Woody/Josh. She removes
him gently from his stand and cradles him in her arms.
SUSAN
I’ll
bet it was that Zoltar machine again. I knew what would happen if he
ever got his hands on that
license.
CLARENCE
“He”?
“He” who? I don’t remember another man in the story.
SUSAN
No, no
one does. That’s probably why he was always so jealous of Josh. My
old boyfriend, Paul. You know, now the number-one
most-successful toy company in
the world.
Clarence
beams with enlightenment and inspiration.
CLARENCE
I
think I know why I’m here, then, Miss Susan. It seems you have come
to a fork in your fate, a choice for how you wish your future to
unfold.
SUSAN
I
think I’ve always had that choice, pal.
CLARENCE
Certainly,
my dear, I mean no disrespect. However, given the opportunity to put
something right that once went wrong, what might you choose to do?
Susan
begins to stroll thoughtfully through her toy showroom, her precious
Woody/Josh in her arms. The questions, the many possible answers, the
what-ifs, the why-nots, all converging and tumbling through her mind.
Clarence
glances Heavenward for a hint of advice.
JORDAN
(off stage)
We did
pass that free-will amendment awhile back. I wouldn’t interfere,
darling Clarence.
SUSAN
Darling
Clarence … I mean, Mr.
Angelo. Clarence. Darling. If I had said Yes and followed Josh back
to childhood, raging hormones and all, then the world would have been
deprived of this fine specimen (she holds Woody aloft).
CLARENCE
Perhaps
not. Perhaps your friend Paul would have snapped up the license. You
wouldn’t have been there to fight for it.
SUSAN
Oh
please. Paul. You know how he got to be number one?
CLARENCE
Uh,
no. How?
SUSAN
He
licensed the Charlie Brown Christmas Tree.
CLARENCE
No!
MARLEY
(off stage)
Ha!
Way to go, brother! Commercializing the symbol of anti-commercialism!
Ha! Crafty little humbug!
Susan
hugs her beloved Woody/Josh, clicks her heels together three times,
turns to the wizardly Clarence, and closes her eyes.
SUSAN
I’m
ready to go back now! There’s no place like 13. There’s no place
like 13. There’s no place like 13.
Susan
squeezes one eye open to implore Clarence with one final request.
SUSAN
I
don’t suppose we could both go back to 30, eh? Or at least where
we’re the same age. That whole 15 or 20 year age difference was so
unsettling and inappropriate.
CLARENCE
I
think we can manage that. (Beat. He glances Heavenward.)
OK, Mr. Jordan. Let ‘er rip!
A
clash of Heavenly thunder is heard, accompanied by the usual
scene-changing lightning, and we find ourselves on:
EXT.
JOSH’S STREET. SUNSET
Clarence,
Mr. Jordan, and even Biff Marley survey the scene, now 20 years into
the future. An 80-year-old man and his 80-year-old wife hold hands
tenderly as they stroll together down the sidewalk and into the amber
twilight.
Somewhere
in the distance, Zoltar laughs mischievously.
FADE
OUT.
FINIS.
For more of Clarence's "saving" adventures, the gentle and indulgent reader is invited to peruse:
Saving Mr. Potter (Dec. 22, 2013)
Christmas Belle: or, Saving Miss Fezziwig (Dec. 22, 2014)
Saving Mr. Sawyer (Dec. 25, 2015)
Saving Mr. Jordan (Dec. 25, 2016)
Love, hosaa
As Clay Aiken (America's No. 1 No. 2) would sing, Don't Save It All For Christmas Day